Nomad
Lil-Rokslider
Most beef in the US is actually wet aged, because it's more cost effective and you encounter less shrinkage. Dry aging is reserved for the higher value cuts and specialty/niche markets.
The poster above is correct. Wet aging does not mean you're submerging the meat. Commercially, subprimal cuts are vacuum packed in order to retain moisture... something that obviously doesn't happen when dry aging. At the end of the day, what we're essentially discussing in this thread is wet aging.... Although I also am still not clear if some folks are actually keeping water around the meat on purpose.
The poster above is correct. Wet aging does not mean you're submerging the meat. Commercially, subprimal cuts are vacuum packed in order to retain moisture... something that obviously doesn't happen when dry aging. At the end of the day, what we're essentially discussing in this thread is wet aging.... Although I also am still not clear if some folks are actually keeping water around the meat on purpose.